Chart Of The Day: It's Official, The Dow's Bull Run Is Over

 | Mar 12, 2020 10:58AM ET

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped yesterday, completing a 20.30% decline at the close, from its closing peak of 29,551.42 on Feb. 12. That put the mega-cap index officially into a bear market.

Of perhaps even greater note, yesterday's close also ended the Dow's 11-year bull market, the longest bull run on record. Investors most likely won't be seeing those kind of numbers again for years.

On average, bear markets last less than a year, whereas bull markets play out over about 2 and two-thirds years. Meaning, on average, it will take at least another three and-a-half years for the next bull market to occur. Which doesn’t necessarily mean the blue-chip index will head back to record levels. For comparison, between the all-time high the Dow hit on October 2007, to when it bested that level during March 2013, five and-a-half years elapsed. 

And that didn't follow the the longest bull market on record. According to the old adage, the bigger they are the harder they fall. Would that apply to stock market cycles as well?

Could be. The previous longest bull market ended with the 2000 crash, and it took the Dow Jones Industrial Average almost seven years to return those same highs.